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<title>MINERALOGICAL, GEOCHEMICAL AND STABLE ISOTOPE STUDIES OF  CLAY DEPOSITS IN THE LOWER BENUE TROUGH, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1091</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 18:39:05 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T18:39:05Z</dc:date>
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<title>MINERALOGICAL, GEOCHEMICAL AND STABLE ISOTOPE STUDIES OF  CLAY DEPOSITS IN THE LOWER BENUE TROUGH, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1092</link>
<description>MINERALOGICAL, GEOCHEMICAL AND STABLE ISOTOPE STUDIES OF  CLAY DEPOSITS IN THE LOWER BENUE TROUGH, NIGERIA
IDAKWO, SUNDAY OJOCHOGWU
The Lower Benue Trough (LBT) is a clay-shale rich basin with lots of industrial clay deposits with &#13;
considerable economic value. Previous studies focused mainly on the geochemistry and mineralogy of &#13;
the clay deposits for industrial applications, while detailed information on the geochemical &#13;
characterisation, genetic delineation and tectonic setting of the clay deposits are generally lacking. &#13;
Therefore, the aim of this study was to undertake detailed mineralogical, chemical and stable isotope &#13;
composition of the clay deposits in part of the LBT. &#13;
Clay samples were collected in the LBT purposively on the basis of the lithologic character at Aloji &#13;
(10), Agbenema (5), Udane-Biomi (5), Ofejiji (10), Okpokwu (5), Otukpa (5) and Enugu (10) areas. &#13;
Mineralogy and morphology of the samples were determined using X-ray diffractometry and scanning &#13;
electron microscopy. Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR), differential thermal and thermogravimetric &#13;
analyses were used to determine the structure and the thermal conditions of the clays. Major elements &#13;
composition was determined by inductively coupled plasma- atomic emission spectroscopy, while &#13;
trace and rare-earth elements were by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. The Chemical &#13;
Index of Alteration (CIA), Plagioclase Index of Alteration (PIA) and Chemical Index of Weathering &#13;
(CIW) of the clay samples were calculated. Hydrogen and oxygen isotopic compositions were &#13;
measured by Delta Plus XP isotope ratio mass spectrometer (IRMS) and Thermo Scientific MAT 253 &#13;
mass-spectrometer, respectively. Descriptive statistics was used to analyse the data obtained, while &#13;
geochemical discrimination diagrams were used to interprete the geochemical data. &#13;
Kaolinite (40-49%), quartz (37-55%), vermiculite (1-4%), muscovite (1-8%) and microcline (2-5%), &#13;
were the minerals in the clay samples. The book-like morphology of the kaolinite and the &#13;
characteristic FTIR bands at 3694.6-3660.1 cm-1 confirmed that it has not undergone diagenesis but &#13;
rather suffered weight loss at temperature range of 499 to 504 °C. The SiO2 (66.8-90.3%), Al2O3 (6.7-&#13;
22.7%), Fe2O3 (0.3-3.9%) and LOI (3.3-11.1%) were characteristic of quartz-rich kaolinitic clay&#13;
mineral assemblage. The concentrations (in ppm) of Co (0.6-7.6), Ni (0.1-1.1), and V (42.0-90.0) &#13;
indicated a felsic source comparable to the upper continental crust, while the calculated CIA (83.1-&#13;
99.8), PIA (98.5-99.9) and CIW (99.2-99.9) values suggested derivation of the clay from intense &#13;
chemical weathering of the source rocks. The La/Sc (3.7-9.3), Th/Sc (0.6-3.1), and Th/Co (2.0-21.0);&#13;
the light rare-earth enrichment and depleted heavy rare-earth with negative Eu anomaly confirmed a &#13;
felsic crustal origin. The La-Th-Sc discrimination diagram showed typical granitic gneiss source. The &#13;
log of (K2O/Na2O) vs SiO2, La-Co-Zr/10 and Th-Sc-Zr/10 indicated a passive margin tectonic setting, &#13;
while the Eu/Eu* vs (Gd/Yb)N diagram suggested a Proterozoic age for the granitic gneiss source. The &#13;
oxygen and hydrogen isotope values of +15.4 to +21.2‰ and -66.4 to -50.8‰ were consistent with &#13;
chemically weathered residual material deposited under an oxic environmental condition at high &#13;
temperature of formation (54-91°C), which revealed formation of the kaolinitic clay under a hot and &#13;
humid paleo-climatic condition. &#13;
The quartz-rich kaolinitic clay deposits in the Lower Benue Trough were derived from the chemical &#13;
weathering of Proterozoic granitic gneiss. The clay was deposited in a passive margin tectonic setting,&#13;
under a tropical climatic condition.
</description>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Feb 2020 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1092</guid>
<dc:date>2020-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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